BERLIN, April 13 (Reuters) – Germany’s coalition government has agreed fuel price relief for consumers and businesses worth 1.6 billion euros ($1.9 billion), ending a spat about how to react to a spike in oil prices due to the Iran war https://www.reuters.com/world/iran/.
The energy tax on diesel and petrol will be reduced by about 0.17 euros per litre for two months, the conservative CDU party and its centre-left SPD coalition partners said on Monday.
The Iran war https://www.reuters.com/world/iran/ has caused the biggest-ever disruption to global energy supplies, and a planned U.S. blockade nL6N40V09S of Iranian ports and coastal areas is further inflating crude oil prices nL1N40V07F.
“This war is the real cause of the problems we are experiencing in our own country as well,” Chancellor Friedrich Merz said at a press conference.
He added that the coalition was doing everything it could to tackle problems caused by the war, which has been put on hold for now in a fragile ceasefire deal.
The coalition also agreed to allow companies to pay a 1,000 euro relief bonus per employee, free of payroll taxes and social security charges.
In talks over the weekend, the partners appear to have defused a row that erupted nL6N40T0LA on Friday when Economy Minister Katherina Reiche, a Merz party ally, criticised measures suggested by Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil of the Social Democrats centred on a special tax on oil companies’ windfall profits.
A person close to Merz, however, told Reuters that Reiche’s remarks undermined a push by the chancellor to resolve coalition disputes discreetly.
The government was under pressure to act because Europe’s largest economy was already struggling with weak growth and global tariff ructions.
On Monday, Merz said Germany opposes a planned 2027 tightening of European Union CO2 levies for hybrid vehicles and would argue in Brussels for a more “technology-open” approach, including recognition of cars powered by renewable fuels.
The government is also preparing broader income tax reform for lower- and middle-income groups from January 2027.
($1 = 0.8556 euros)
(Reporting by Andreas Rinke, Maria Martinez and Miranda Murray, writing by Ludwig Burger, editing by Kirsten Donovan)